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_III: A Warning_
From the shock of that gruesome discovery, Simon Varr reeled back both mentally and physically. Involuntarily, he threw up a hand to s.h.i.+eld his eyes, then got the best of his terror and fell to rubbing them, pretending to himself that this had been the intention behind the gesture; doubtless their vision was blurred and had deceived him into thinking the unthinkable--
He dropped his hand presently, blinked once or twice and prepared to make a more careful scrutiny of the monk's appearance. He was balked in this courageous essay. The apparition, if such it were, had acted in accordance with tradition and had vanished. While his eyes were covered it had departed, whether to left or right or merely into thin air he could not tell. He did not debate the question, either--he simply thanked his stars it was gone!
It was with considerable reluctance that he resumed his way up the path, but the daylight at the end of the trail looked inviting and rea.s.suring compared to the twilight in the woods and he covered the distance to the spot where the monk had stood in a sort of a dogtrot.
It was here that he made a fresh discovery as he collided rather heavily with some obstruction in the path, an obstruction that gave way as his body impinged upon it, but that nearly tripped him as it fell between his legs.
He picked it up, but did not pause to examine it. The light ahead still lured and he continued his flight toward it, bearing his find with him.
He drew a deep breath of thankfulness as he finally emerged from the woods into the comforting aura of the kitchen garden; his eyes rested upon and were wonderfully soothed by a row of peaceful cabbages. Never before had he noticed how beautiful a cabbage can be, but to a man fresh from dalliance with a ghost there is something very steadying and sustaining in a glimpse of that most stolid and solid of vegetables.
There was a granite bowlder near-by on which he dropped gratefully for a minute's rest. It was while reaching for a handkerchief to pat his moist forehead that he was reminded of the object he had picked up and still carried. He looked at it now, and found that it was a heavy stick which must have been thrust firmly into the center of the path in the woods; one end of it was split, and into the cleft had been thrust a bit of folded paper--brown paper, he noted, of cheap quality, but what really took his eye as he drew it free was his own name in typewritten letters on the outside.
Evidently this was intended for him, and he was about to open it to see what message it might contain when the sound of hurrying steps from the direction of the path diverted him from his purpose. Whatever the contents of the paper might be, they were for him alone. Prompted by an instinct for secrecy which was part of his psychological cosmos, he thrust the missive into the breast-pocket of his coat and turned--with a little tremor from his nerves--to see who was coming.
It was a woman who burst from the shelter of the trees--a woman in some haste and quite obviously in some alarm. She was panting from her exertions, for she ceased running only when she reached the open, as Varr had done before her. A close-fitting felt hat was slightly askew on her head, and a once jaunty red feather that thrust up from it was now hanging limp and dejected, broken perhaps by some low-hanging branch she had failed to duck. She was dressed in a two-piece outing costume of knitted wool, and she looked just now as if those garments were too warm for comfort.
Her face brightened as she observed Varr seated on the rock, and she came toward him promptly. He brightened, too, welcoming any human being of tangible flesh and blood at that moment, although there was no living person whom he habitually detested more than he did his wife's sister, Miss October Copley. Her evident perturbation, however, gave him an uneasy premonition that he was about to hear more of his monk.
But he left it to her to introduce the subject.
"Well, Ocky--reducing?"
"Not much!" answered the lady briefly. "_Scared_!"
She did not seat herself beside him on the bowlder, but chose instead to drop at full length on a patch of green turf at his feet. With such breath as remained to her she expelled a sigh of relief.
"Scared, eh? I didn't suppose there was anything on earth that could scare you!"
She pounced instantly on his phraseology. "Perhaps not--on earth!" In a smaller voice than she was wont to employ, she added timidly, "Simon, d-do you believe in ghosts?"
"_Ghosts_!" He fortified himself by a glance at the cabbages. "Talk sense, Ocky!"
"Who says it isn't sense?" snapped Miss Copley. "Anyway, I just got the shock of my long and exciting life. See here, Simon--didn't you come up that path a few minutes ago?"
"I did. What of it?"
"I was sure it was you ahead of me as we crossed the meadow. Tell me, did you meet anything--I mean, any one?"
"What do you mean? Did _you_?"
"Y-yes. A figure in black--dressed something like a monk. I didn't meet him, exactly--he dodged into the woods as I came along. That is, I suppose he did--he just seemed to vanis.h.!.+"
"Oh--he seemed to vanish, did he?" Varr s.h.i.+fted nervously on his granite throne. "You say he was dressed like a monk? Did--did you see his _face_?"
"No, I couldn't see that--"
"Ah! You couldn't, eh?" He rubbed the palms of his hands on his handkerchief as he probed a little deeper. "Too far away, I suppose."
"No. He had on a mask."
"A _mask_!" Comprehension came to him at once, and he inwardly cursed himself for an imaginative fool before continuing. "Well, Ocky, to tell you the truth, I did see him--right here at the head of the trail.
He had his back to the light so I couldn't make out any mask. Er--what made you think of ghosts?"
"Because I had such a creepy feeling when I saw him. Didn't you?"
"Humph. For a moment, perhaps."
"Did you pa.s.s each other after you met?"
"Why--why-- Confound it--_no_! He just _disappeared_!"
"Gos.h.!.+" said Miss Copley fervently. "Simon, it _was_ a spook! I know it was! Have you ever seen or heard of a monk around here before?"
"N-no. But that doesn't mean anything. There's no law that says they can't travel if they want to."
"But what would a monk be doing on a private path through this property? Why should he disappear from people? Why should he wear a mask? Monks don't wear masks." She reflected a moment. "Come to think of it, he wasn't dressed exactly like a monk--Simon! did you ever see a picture of those creatures of the Spanish Inquisition?
'Familiars' I think they used to call them. They dressed that way and wore masks!"
"Humph." Despite that skeptic snort, Varr was conscious of a nervous chill. "You've been drinking too much coffee, Ocky! Indigestion!"
"_Oh_!" cried Miss Copley suddenly. She raised herself on an elbow and looked all about her on the ground. "Oh--_pshaw_!"
"Eh? What is it?"
"Coffee! Your mentioning it just reminded me! I was coming back from a walk and I stopped at Wimpelheimer's to get a pound of it--I knew it was needed at the house. Now it's gone! I must have dropped it when that creature frightened me." She looked woebegone. "It's not very far back, but I'm so tired!"
"Are you?" repeated Varr restlessly.
"You'll get it for me, won't you, Simon?" She regarded him appealingly. "Oh--please!"
He got up from the rock and glanced at her with marked distaste. His gaze traveled to the dark entrance of the trail, came back to rest briefly on the consoling cabbages, went again to the trail. He took an irresolute, halting step--and then was struck by an inspiration that cleared his brow as if by magic.
"What do I keep a houseful of idle servants for?" he demanded crisply.
"Let Bates hunt it up--he'd better take a torch."
"Simon--you're _scared_!"
"Don't be ridiculous. Anyway, it's going to storm. I felt a drop of rain a moment ago. Come along to the house and stop your nonsense about monks and familiars and--and ghosts!"
Perhaps the last word came out a little uncertainly, but as he strode through the kitchen garden and around to the front door, followed closely by Miss Copley, he decided with pardonable pride that he had extricated himself from an embarra.s.sing position with his accustomed masterful dexterity. The thought comforted him, for he vaguely realized that he had come close to experiencing a nervous panic during those minutes in the woods.
A white-haired man, still lithe, erect and agile despite his years, opened the door for them as their steps sounded on the planking of the veranda. This was Bates, the butler, a faithful retainer who had served the father of Lucy Varr and her sister a full decade before pa.s.sing with the house and land into the keeping of the younger daughter and her husband. At the time of Mr. Copley's death, Varr had tentatively suggested letting the man go, but his wife had protested against that idea and had gained her point by shrewdly convincing her husband that good servants were becoming increasingly difficult to find and that Bates could never be replaced for less than twice his wages.
It was one of the very rare occasions when Simon had credited the gentle, self-effacing lady with showing sound sense.